Mitchnick Krista A, Wideman Cassidy E, Huff Andrew E, Palmer Daniel, McNaughton Bruce L, Winters Boyer D
Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, Canada; Collaborative Neuroscience Program, University of Guelph, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, Canada; Collaborative Neuroscience Program, University of Guelph, Canada.
Behav Brain Res. 2018 May 15;344:48-56. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2018.01.030. Epub 2018 Feb 2.
The capacity to recognize objects from different view-points or angles, referred to as view-invariance, is an essential process that humans engage in daily. Currently, the ability to investigate the neurobiological underpinnings of this phenomenon is limited, as few ethologically valid view-invariant object recognition tasks exist for rodents. Here, we report two complementary, novel view-invariant object recognition tasks in which rodents physically interact with three-dimensional objects. Prior to experimentation, rats and mice were given extensive experience with a set of 'pre-exposure' objects. In a variant of the spontaneous object recognition task, novelty preference for pre-exposed or new objects was assessed at various angles of rotation (45°, 90° or 180°); unlike control rodents, for whom the objects were novel, rats and mice tested with pre-exposed objects did not discriminate between rotated and un-rotated objects in the choice phase, indicating substantial view-invariant object recognition. Secondly, using automated operant touchscreen chambers, rats were tested on pre-exposed or novel objects in a pairwise discrimination task, where the rewarded stimulus (S+) was rotated (180°) once rats had reached acquisition criterion; rats tested with pre-exposed objects re-acquired the pairwise discrimination following S+ rotation more effectively than those tested with new objects. Systemic scopolamine impaired performance on both tasks, suggesting involvement of acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors in view-invariant object processing. These tasks present novel means of studying the behavioral and neural bases of view-invariant object recognition in rodents.
从不同视角或角度识别物体的能力,即视角不变性,是人类日常都会进行的一项基本过程。目前,研究这一现象神经生物学基础的能力有限,因为针对啮齿动物几乎不存在符合行为学标准的视角不变物体识别任务。在此,我们报告了两种互补的新型视角不变物体识别任务,啮齿动物可与三维物体进行实际互动。在实验前,大鼠和小鼠对一组“预暴露”物体有丰富的体验。在自发物体识别任务的一个变体中,在不同旋转角度(45°、90°或180°)下评估对预暴露物体或新物体的新奇偏好;与物体对其而言是新奇的对照啮齿动物不同,用预暴露物体进行测试的大鼠和小鼠在选择阶段对旋转和未旋转的物体没有区分,表明具有显著的视角不变物体识别能力。其次,使用自动操作触摸屏箱,在一项配对辨别任务中对大鼠进行预暴露物体或新物体的测试,一旦大鼠达到习得标准,奖励刺激(S+)就会旋转(180°);用预暴露物体进行测试的大鼠在S+旋转后比用新物体进行测试的大鼠更有效地重新获得了配对辨别能力。全身性给予东莨菪碱会损害两项任务的表现,表明毒蕈碱受体处的乙酰胆碱参与了视角不变物体加工。这些任务为研究啮齿动物视角不变物体识别的行为和神经基础提供了新方法。